Electronic feed system produces dramatic results By Doris Crowley Computerized management is one of the newest technologies to be applied to dairy farming. In a move to strengthen its research efforts and provide additional information to local dairy farmers, in January 1984 the University of Delaware Agricultural Ex periment Station installed an electronic feeding and milking system on its Newark farm. Each cow in the Delaware herd now wears an electronic tran sponder on a collar around her neck, as do most of the young stock. Through a computer located in the farm office, this transponder automatically identifies the animal in the milking parlor and controls her access to high energy feed supplements in the univer sity’s large free stall barn. It also provides a continuous record of her performance and activity. According to extension dairy specialist Dr. George Haenlein, the new system makes it possible to individualize herd management and eliminate many of the production inefficiencies which cost dairy farmers money. Benefits of computerizing the university herd have been dramatic. In the milking parlor, the new system features the latest technology in electronic milk metering, milker back-flushing, automatic milker take-off, quarter milking, milk precooling and milk monitoring. Flashing signal lights tell personnel if a cow has been treated with antibiotics and should be milked separately. The system also informs the herd manager if a cow is off her feed and may be sick, or if she’s coming into estrus and should be bred. Information on each animal is routinely stored in the computer, where it is readily accessible for study. Herd manager Jim Wolfer says it takes him about 15 minutes a week to update feeding in formation on the herd. And thanks to mini-terminals beside each stall in the milking parlor, he doesn’t even need to go to his office to check up on individual animals. Since each cow identifies herself on the system through the tran sponder around her neck, there’s also no chance for human error in the form of oversights or mistakes in identification. This guarantees accurate record-keeping. The computer is the key to the whole system. It has been programmed to provide printed copies (routinely or on demand) of the following information; sum maries of milk produced and grain fed through the two automatic feeder; a list of all cows giving less tan 85 percent of their normal milk production; a list of all cows eating less than 90 percent of their allotted gram; a report on cows currently needing special attention for breeding purposes or pregnancy checks; a breeding report on the entire herd, listing each cow as either bred ot open, when due to calve, when ready to be bred, stage of lactation and when she should be dried off; a summary of milk produced and feed consumed by each cow since calving, including her feed/milk ratio; and a complete report on each cow in the herd. This information is useful for both research and making routine management decisions. The system’s two electronically activated feeders make it possible to deliver prescribed amounts of feed supplement to each cow based on her production record and in dividual need. The transponder around her neck permits her to access her daily grain ration in a minimum of six meals over a 24- hour period. She receives only a handful or so of feed each time, so she never gets a chance to overeat or to steafanother cow’s ration. “Instead,” says Haenlein, who is an authority on dairy nutrition, “she becomes a nibbler, using what she gets more efficiently, with none of the digestive highs and lows common in most open barn arrangements where more aggressive animals often eat more than they should.” With intake spaced out in several small meals, rumen fermentation and digestion are spread more evenly over the 24-hour period and so become more efficient. Leveling out con sumption also helps eliminate metabolic disturbances such as ketosis and milk fever. The electronic feeders have had another, unexpected benefit. Because each cow gets only her allotted ration, pushy eaters have no incentive to crowd out more timid ones. “As a result,” says the specialist, “we’ve eliminated the bossy cow-one of the main behavior problems in today’s open barn management system. ’ ’ Another benefit of the feeders is that the daily computer printout of the herd’s activities identifies any cows which aren’t eating all of their allotment. This makes it possible to detect potential problems early. “Otherwise,” says Haenlein, “it may be another 24 hours before someone notices a cow’s off her feed. By then, her milk production will also be down. Under our new electronic system we can treat sick cows sooner and more effectively.” Haenlein believes the adoption of computer technology is essential to dairy farm survival, since it permits farmers to retain the labor-saving advantages of open bam or group management while again giving cows the individual attention they got years ago in the FIRST CHOKE FOR CLEAN FREEDS. Broadleaf control. Grass control. Bicep* gives you cleaner fields of com than any other herbicide, premix or tank mix. Without the hassle of tank mixing. Bicep is a single formulation herbicide that provides season-long control of broadleaf weeds and grasses because of its unique combination of chemical properties. Low volatility —there is very little evaporation off the trash. Good solubility —a little moisture carries Bicep into the weed and grass germinating zone. Excellent Adsorption —once in the weed germinating zone, Bicep adheres to soil particles, providing season-long control. 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It is too soon to determine the economic impact of the univer sity’s new electronic dairy system, but it is already proving its worth as a research and teaching tool, as well as an aid to herd management. “Based on my own experience with the University of Delaware dairy herd and my observations of other herds using computer feeders, I believe the savings will be at least as great and the payoff period possibly even shorter, if there was free-choice grain feeding before,” the specialist says. “Two added benefits of this new computer technology are the greater ability to put weight back on a cow after she calves, and to maintain per peak production longer.” OBA-GEK3Y Haenlein points out that coir puter feeders won’t solve all dair management problems “Producers still must stay on to] of all those additional records th system will generate if they wan to get the greatest possible ef ficiency by dispensing the righ amount of feed to the right cow a the right time. And they still neei to test forage to be sure the propei balance of nutrients is available This may require altering the feeds offered in response tt changing forage test results.” He also points out that electronic equipment needs special treat ment to operate properly without breakdown. “It’s quite a change from the days when dairy farming was mostly a pitchfork operation," he says. “Let’s .hope this new technology will return to the dairy farm those profits which presently are so hard to find. C 19*5 OtwGawy Corpontdoa Cib«-G«i*>, A* DMoa. Rot 18.100. OrMMborai NC ZMI9